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Editor, Manager
Phone RI 4111
Station 221
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJATs
United Press World Wide News Service
Vol. XXIV
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, February 14, 1933
No. 85
ail Karris Is Scheduled for Football Dance
[Ambassador Orchestra To Play Group of Tunes On Friday Night
Entertainers Will Add to Program for Annual Benefit Event
Phil Harris and his nationally Iknown Cocoanut Grove orchestra, L^ah Ray, Lee Norton, and the rhree Ambassadors will help entertain for the annual football (dance which will be held Friday liprhT in the Fiesta room of the (Ambassador hotel. Her Johnson, [barman of the orchestra and en-f“r: muent committee, said last light.
Harris and his orchestra will >lay one entire dance group, ac->rdiag to present plans. The Jther entertainers will be featured | g intermissions. Hal Wayne tnd his orchestra, which has just jome to the Pacific Coast from Jew York City will play for the |rrid affair.
interfraternity Sponsors Sponsored by the lnterfraterni-councii, the scholarship com-littee ol the Faculty club, and Ihe Associated Fraternity Mothers’ clubs, proceeds of the hop fill go to a general Btudent loan | und, not restricted to fraternity len or sorority women.
Members of the 1932 squad, the ireeu Bay Packers, and captains id raptains-olect of southern California college teams will be lests of honor at the affair. Sev-|ral motion picture actors have )!lso l>e* a invited to attend.
Jackie Cooper To Attend Jackie Cooper, child film star, rill award the attractive door prizes to those attending the lance. These eight prizes will be fiver to the holders of winning numbers on the ticket stubs. The younj actor will officiate at the drawing.
John Miljan, featured Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer player will act as master of ceremonies for the evening. Other celebrities are expected to attend, according to Page Parker, general chairman.
Tickets are now' on sale at the cashier's window of the University bookstore and by members of the ticket committee of which Jack Rose is chairman. There is a representative of the committee I in each fraternity. The bids, which are in the form of a football licket, are SI.50.
Hoover Reaffirms G.O.P. Pledge To Back Incoming Roosevelt Administration
NEW YORK. Feb. 13—(UP)—President Hoover, in his farewell address to the American people, tonight pledged the support of the Republican party to the new Democratic administration in even- measure promoting the nation’s welfare. He spoke at a Lincoln day gathering of Republicans here.
---* Republicans will, he added, vigilantly oppose all harmful measures.
Declaring he had no complaint at the outcome of the last elec-■ tion, Mr. Hoover predicted the Republican party will be recalled
Eligible Women Will Be Listed
Pan-hel Rush Rules Must Be Observed by All University Girls
Names of girls eligible for pledging will be posted on the bulletin board of the registrar’s office tomorrow, according to the Panhellenic council. Sororities are reminded that only girls appearing on the list may be offered bids.
Rushing rules must be strictly observed by both rushees and sorority girls. A 10-minute time limit for conversation on campus extends until truce begins tomorrow at 9 p.m. Preference, which will be at the sorority houses Thursday evening, is not binding as it has been heretofore.
Dunng truce, which extends from tomorrow night until Monday at 5 p.m. when pledging takes place, there must be no communication with the exception of tomorrow evening when the rushees are called over the phone and invited to preference, and Thursday morning between 7 and 10 when rushees may phone accep-tions to preference.
Sororities must have their bids in Dean Mary Sinclair Crawford's office by 8 Friday morning, and rushees will sign their preferences before 4 Friday afternoon; after atructioniT this time sororities may call for ' Alternatives Named
to power by the American people.
G.O.P. Strength Told
“An organization that can show more than 15,000.000 adherents after 70 years—an irreducible minimum in the reaction from the worst depression the world has ever seen—is indeed testimony to the virility of the principles which Lincoln enunciated,” Mr. Hoover said. ‘ ‘Those principles, the fiber and determination of the party assure that it will be recalled to power .by the American people.” Mr. Hoover renewed his plea for retention of the gold standard as the only path of safety for the nation. He added however, that the world should endeavor to find a place for silver, at least in enlarged subsidiary coinage.
Opposes Cancellation Cancellation of war debts would not give relief and the importance of these debts in world trade is exaggerated, Mr. Hoover continued. He suggested that if central banks should cooperate to stabilize world currencies, some part of the debt payments might be set aside for temporary use in this way.
Mr. Hoover asked for national solidarity in dealing with international questions. He said the best path to recovery lay in cooperating with the world in reviving consumption and stabilized currencies and reducing trade ob-
Deadline Set Today for Annual Photos
Announcing that today would be the last day to make appointments for having El Rodeo pictures taken, Walt Roberts, editor of the 1933 annual, last night issued an ultimatum to fraternities declaring emphatically that Wednesday w'ould be the last day that anyone would be photographed.
Panels of each house have to be arranged and the pictures have to go to the engraver soon.
their un-accepted bids.
New Law School Directory Prints Student Roster
The Law school directory, of value to new pre-legal students as a handbook, was distributed today. Additional copies will be given out today.
He warned that if this way out it closed, America may have to j take the less desirable alternative of withdrawing into its democratic ! shell, boosting tariffs, quotas, and discriminations and artifiicially I curtailing farm and other produc-I tions.
National party leaders were on i hand in large numbers. As this was the last major address of i Mr. Hoover before he leaves of-j flee, it was awaited with intense I expectation as an index of the j course he believes the party should follow^ in recovering from ! the blow of last November.
Commerce Expert To Talk Tomorrow
With Dean J. Hugh Jackson of I the Stanford Graduate School of Business as guest speaker, the S. C. College of Commerce will present ts first assembly of the semester tomorrow morning at 9:55 I in Bovard auditorium.
Known throughout the Uniied I States as the author of several text-b-x>ks and as a contributor [ to national magazines. Dean Jackson if* one of the nation’s leading I educa ors in the field oi business | administration. Receiving his degree of A.B. from Simpson col-f'ege n 1912, and the degree of M.B.A. at Harvard in 1920. Professor Jackson began his educational career as a high school commerce instructor.
He received his first college appointment as assistant professor of commerce at the University of Oregon. Later he became professor of accounting at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Admit istration, where he remain-[ ed from 1923 to 1927.
Dean Jackson came to 8canford ' in 1927 as professor of accounting ln the Graduate School of Busi-I ness, and wag awarded the position of dean in 1931.
The 36-page booklet, with a dark blue cover, contains information concerning the governmental. scholastic, and professional ac- rnntAcf Tn tivities of the School of Law, be- | E-*say ^Onie« 1 O DC
sides a roster of the current law Sponsored Dy CirOUp students. -
It is issued free through the ! For thc Puri>ose of “tiiuulating courtesy of ‘Charles R. Baird of ! interest in management problems, Parker, Stone, and Baird, printers j an essa-v contest, sponsored by and publishers. The books may > *^e C. American Management be obtained in the Law building, association, is being held for all John W. Houser was editor of ! lower division men students. The the 1933 edition of the directory, essays, not to exceed 1000 wrords, --— are to be turned in to the secretary in room 110, Old College, not
Wandervogel Group later than March 1.
New Japanese Advance Ready
China Fully Prepared To Meet Invaders With Strong Opposition
(Copyright 1933 by United Press)
TOKIO, Tuesday, Feb. 14.—(LE) —Japan's military forces will shortly occupy disputed Jehol province despite world opinion, it appeared absolutely certain today.
Possibility that the grim, green-clad infantrymen of the Japanese imperial army will push on past the great Chinese wall to occupy Tientsin and Peiping cannot be ignored. Developments at Peiping and Nanking, headquarters of the Chinese nationalist government, indicate China is prepared to resist the Japanese in Jehol on a scale even more extensive than was the defense of Shanghai.
Press and public here are most concerned over developments at Geneva. Japan is sincerely anxious for league of nations approval of its activities.
Japanese diplomatic leaders, however, bluntly declare the league and the United States government a?« mistaken, il they believe there will be any deviation from Japan’s fixed policy of continuing dejure recognition of Manchoukuo.
Veteran observers have never seen Japan more united.
Informed sources declare the league and the United States must be prepared to use extensive military force if they hope to carry out any subsequent efforts to enforce their view points in the Far East after the league of nations assembly adopts pending recommendations criticizing Japanese activity in Manchuria.
Japan will unquestionably reject the league’s Manchuria recommendations, although an attempt may be made to delay proceedings by suggesting revisions, «uuendments and reservations.
All-Campus Man T o Be Revealed In Wampus Poll
February Issue of Humor Magazine To Emerge Friday, Feb. 17
Prologue to Big Mystery To Be Published as First of Serial
The ‘‘All-Campus Man,” chosen by a poll of prominent women of the campus, will be a feature of the February issue of tho Wampus which will make its first appearance of the semester, Friday, the 17 th.
The Wampus, this month, offers the prologue to a great campus mystery, “Death to 6,000,” by the Pre-Rf.phaelite brotherhood. This prologue, as it will give a clue to the outcome of the serial, of which the first installment will appear in the March issue.
Eddy Writes on Hockey Arnol Eddy, patron saint of ice hockey at S.C., has written an article on the Trojan ice hockey team for fans of the sport,
Gooney Island, \N'ampus colony at the North Pole, claims four more victims this month, and their names will ba revealed on Friday. Last month, Ted Magee, Mary Ann Cotton, Erma Eldridge, and Mac Morganthau were “Goo ney-ed.”
Super-Snooping Staff An entire new staff of supersnoopers has been added to what was already a complete and sen sational staff of gossip-gleaners. These newr members of the staff are second cousins to the Belch boys, Satchel and Rainwater, and will scandalize the campus with their choice bits of "dirt.”
“The All-Campus Male” is a poll conducted among campus women to determine their requisites for the ideal man; while the ideal campus is visualized by Polly White and Juanita MacIntyre in “Co-ed Paradise.”
A special story about the Trojan Knights has been written by Bob Boyle, Trojan Knight. Bob Russell presents the Second appearance of “Bitter Annie,” and Douglas Hale again offers his "Spartan Page.”
Photographic Cover In a more serious vein are “The Bookworm Turns,” by Les Koritz and style columns for both men and women. Kappa Alpha Theta and Sigma Phi Epsilon are the featured sorority and fraternity in this issue.
The cover of the magazine is a photographic study by Max Plake, and is different from those previously used.
A number of jokes and cartoons are used to complete the issue.
Fatty Arbuckle Says Laughs Harder To Get
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 13. —(ILE)—Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle, once the leading comedian of the screen, today reported it’s harder now to make people laugh than in the era of custard pies.
“I’m just a vaudeville performer now,” said Arbuckle as he stopped here with Mrs. Arbuckle on their way to Hollywood.
One of his pictures is to be released shortly and he will make another at the end of his vaudeville contract in April.
Ball and Chain Plans To Initiate Pledges
Ball and Chain will hold an [initiat-on banquet tomorrow eve-I amg at the College Inn for its I pledges. The dinner will start at 16 o’clock, and only those pledges [that tave paid their fees will receive the ritual.
I Election of new officers for this [semester also will take place.
Crisis in Holland THE HAGUE, Holland, Feb. 13. i—(LE)—Queen Wilhelmina hurried [back from a holiday in Switrer-jland today to face a critical gov-iamnit-: t situation.
Will Entertain Today
The German club will meet today at 12:15 p.m. in the religious center. The Wandervogel group, which has appeared on campus before, will sing at thi6 meeting. All students interested in German are invited to attend. Box lunches and chocolate will cost 25 cents.
Suggested subjects for the contest include: Five-Hour Day, Its Possibilities in American Industry; Shorter Working Week in American Industry; Influence of Mechanization on Purchasing Power; Effect of Standardization and Specialization on the Standard of Living of Workers; Re-use as It Affects Conservation.
184 Men and 301 Women Enroll in Botany Classes
A woman dressed in mannish attire, striding over hill and dale, plucking blossoms as she goes, and after picking the buds, pressing the flowers in a book and then forgetting them—this is the concept of a botanist by tbe man in the street.
The average S.C. student seems to side with him with the addition of a fresh angle—namely that a botany course is one wherein young women enroll, learn long j Latin names for flow ers, and i promptly forget them. But as far as botany having a practical application to everyday life and being a science in which men participate—that idea seems a little impossible of assimilation by the ordinary person. Figures and facts collected by the botany depart ment, however, seem to prove that brawny men as well as fair women select botany courses and also that botany has a real economic value.
During th® year 1931-32 there were 184 men enrolled in botany
classes and 301 women, which seems to indicate that the study of plant life is of interest to S.C. men. During the same year the number of men who were awarded their master’s degrees in botany practically equalled that of the women.
“While botany as a profession is overcrowded, as are many other fields, it still offers an opportunity to people who wish to do creative work,” according to Mrs. Tema Clare, professor of botany. “Positions in citrus experiment stations, forestry, nurseries, agriculture, and government work are frequently open to botany graduates.”
The S.C. department of botany offers courses in plantecology, in which plant habitat is studied; the study of fungi diseases and parasites; marine plant biology, in which the various seaweeds are studied; and plant physiology, a course for the study of plant reactions and structures
Botanists Plan Field Excursion
Beginning a series of four field trips, general botany classes will make an excursion to Whites’ point, Saturday, for the purpose of studying marine vegetation. George R. Johnstone, professor of botany, will accompany students.
Transportation by means of private cars will be carried on, as in the past. Students wrill meet in the Herbarium, 269 Science, at 9 a.m. Saturday, and will return there by 1 p.m.
Whites’ point is approximately one mile west of Point Firmin, San Pedro, Students should carry a notebook and laboratory paper to use in collection of specimens. The trip is optional for introductory botany classes. Professor Johnstone announced that it would be advisable, but not necessary, to carry lunches.
Hitler Completes Move
BERLIN, Fob. 13.—(LE)—Chancellor Adolf Hitler's “house-cleaning” of Prussia’s administration continued today with an order which eliminated the last remaining Socialist governors and police chiefs in that state.
Assembly
A modern interpretation of St. \ alentine’s day will be the subject of Dr. Bruce Baxter’s talk at 9:55 this morning. Particular reference to the sanctity of the home will be made.
An organ program by Willard Smith will include “Preludio and Siciliano” by Masagni, and "Sortie” by Dubois.
Newman Club Will Hold Dance, Party
Climaxing its pre-lenten social activities, S. C. Newman club will hold a combination card party and dance, Feb. 21, at Newman hall, 4665 Willowbrook avenue, adjacent to Los Angeles junior college campus.
Committee members as announced by John Raymond, president, are: Helen Townsend, Don Sullivan, co-chairmen; Fred Robinson, Mary Ingebrand, Thomas Haley, Loran Ryan, reception; Jean Mustard, Grace Kelly, refreshment; Lucille Moore, cards; Lud Lynch, tickets; Jean McCarter, publicity.
Several prominent orchestras are being considered dfor the dance, which will begin at 9 p.m. and continue until 12, according to Mr. Raymond. Cards will open the evening’s entertainment at 7:30. Closing the games at 9, various attractive prizes will be awarded winners.
Attendance at the affair will be open to all Catholic students and their friends. Individual tickets, at 50 cents, may be obtained from the cashier’s desk in the bookstore or from members of the club/
N.C.P. To Cast Extras Today
Minor Characters Needed For Production of “He Who Gets Slapped”
With the casting today of minor and atmosphere players for the annual N.C.P. production “He Who Gets Slapped,” work on the play will proceed with the cast
complete.
That these minor characters are very essential to the mood and general atmosphere of the play was emphasized by W. Ray MacDonald, who is directing the cast. Tryouts will be held in Bovard at 3:15 and he has invited anyone interested in acting to appear as he will need about 15 characters to complete the cast.
Circus and character stage types will comprise the “atmosphere” personnel. A few' of the parts will be speaking parts, wrhile the other will be more of the crowd scene description. Acrobats, strong men, bareback riders, actresses, and clowns will make up this group and provide the circus background.
The play, a three-act drama by Leonid Andreyev, is a translation from the Russian and portrays the spirit of unrest that prevailed during her frequent revolutions. MacDonald states that it is a symbolic type of play and is one of the heaviest drama plays that a campus cast has ever attempted here.
With the cast of experienced players that have been chosen for the play, he feels confident that an authentic reproduction will be given. The cast of major players includes such well-known campus names as George Ordansky, Norman Wright, Jack Swarthout, Bill Hoppe, Dorothea Bell, Jean Sellers, Bob Boyle, Myra Jane McClung, Margaret Dudley, and Wallace Fraser.
The group has been rehearsing for the past twro weeks.
Fraternities Climax Rushing Activities With Announcement Of New Pledges, Totaling 57
Theater, Mountain Parties, Dances, Stag Affairs, Included in Programs of Season; 13 Men Listed by Phi Kappa Tau
Climaxing a series of entertainments which included theater and mountain parties, dances and stag affairs, fraternities on the campus last night announced the list of their new pledges.
Phi Kappa Tau with 13 prospective members, Sigma Chi with 8 pledges, and Kappa Sigma with 6 neophytes, lead the list of numbers. *
Pledges of Phi Kappa Tau are Nils Altheln, Carlton Ball, Frank Bird, Carl Bland. Wyllis Clark, Frank Doig, Frank Ghiglia. Pink Jones, Martin Kordlck, Walter Harbert, Hamilton Pearce, Johnny Stinson, and Clark Talbot.
Eight for Sigma Chi Sigma Chi’s eight neophytes are Kenny Carpenter, Harry Renick, Dick Applegate, Inky Wotkyns, Gene Fletcher, George McNeish, Bud Rublee, and Howard Smith.
New pledges of Kappa Sigma are Don Hendricks, Phil Searles, Sheldon Loughborough. Bob Hien-zes, Tom Young, and Ted Dirks.
Kappa Alpha pledged Wendell Sether, Al Fitch, Bud Campbell, Pat Henney, and Dick Cummings.
Other Fraternities Pledges of other fraternities follow': Delta Chi, James Appleby, Denny Gless, John Carrington, Earl Ahrens, Jack Witworth, and Andy Sparh; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Charles Archibald, Thomas Rockwell, Roland Smith, Gene Hanson, and Harold Heigold; and Sigma Phi Epsilon, William Tomin, Homer McDowell, Maurice Bonissol, Vic Ried, and Dick Ulrey.
Phi Kappa P3i announces as its pledges Bob Fahy, Bud Fobes, John Raunceville, and Les Guthrie. Sigma Tau pledged Pat Mc-
Activity Points Will
Six New Cardinals Due
VATICAN CITY, Feb. 13.—(IT.E) —Six new cardinals, one from North America, will be created by Pope Pius XI at a secret consistory to be held one month from today.
Roosevelt To Return
MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 13. — (LE) — President-elect Roosevelt will start north late Wednesday night, arriving in New York Friday morning.
All girls wishing to work in the student body offices for activity points are requested to meet Phyllis Doran, secretary to Orv Mohler, president of the A.S. U.S.C., at 12:15 today in S.U. 235 for an interview.
The work will be of regular office routine consisting of typing, filing, and answering the telephone.
Troy To Meet Weber and Oxy
Cancellation of Debts Question of Debate This Afternoon
Continuing preparation on the war debts question after meeting Stanford last Thursday and Friday, the varsity debate squad de* bated Northwest Nazar ene col* lege Friday noon, and will meet a team from W'ebster college tc^ day and two teams from Occidental college later this week.
This afternoon at 3 p.m. ia Hoose 206, Russell Nixon and Lawrence Pritchard will represent Troy in a debate against Web*T college, Ogden. Utah, on the cancellation of war debts. Nixon and Pritchard will advocate their cancellation and the Weber college speake-s will speak against the cancellation in the non-decisioa encounter.
Radio Tilt Decision This is the second debate on thid question to be staged for a Troy audience. Early in January a Trojan team spoke on the nega-Alonan and Walter Stevens. Sigma ! tive of the war debts question Nu pledges are William Sandine, against a team from the Lni'er-Arthur Cook, and Marvin Busby. sit-y of Utah.
The radio debate with Stanford on Communism in Russia is still being decided by the, audience which heard the contest over the air. The debate manager will announce at an early date the winner.
Ames Crawford and Robert North won the audience decision in the debate in Bovard auditorium last Thursday and are waiting for the audience decision from the KFI listeners.
Intra-Squad Contests Clinton Jones and Trevor Hawkins represented S.C. in a nondecision debate on war debts with Northwest Nazarene college before the Unity Republican club Friday noon at Leighton’s cafeteria.
Sunday nfght eight men of the varsity debate squad took part in two intra-squad debates before off campus audiences. At the West Adams Baptist church James Jacobs and Samuel Colton upheld the cancellation of war debts a-gainst Roy Johnston and Jack Layng.
Later in the evening Lawrence Pritchard and Russell Nixon spoke in the affirmative of cancellation of the debts against Martyn Agens and Trevor Hawkins at the Los Angeles open forum, where aa audience decision gave to Ntxon and Pritchard.
'Hs \i\
Tomorrow Last Time To Submit For Quill Club
With the concluding of the semi-annual Quill club contest, the manuscripts will be distributed to the committee of judges at the regular meeting of the club tomorrow night DeWitt Miller, president, reports that a large number of contestants have shown an interest in the contest of creative literary work. The deadline for all material will be tomorrow noon, at ' which time all manuscripts should be in the office of the English department on the third floor of Bridge hall.
All types of literary work are acceptable in this contest, including poetry, plays, fiction, and essays. All students except enter-
Be Awarded Coeds ing freshmen are eligible to submit original material.
Results of the judges’ decisions wrill be announced in about a week. No material except winning manuscripts will be returned, because of the volume which has been received.
A pen name must appear on the right hand corner of each paper with the real name and address enclosed in an attached envelope.
Old Indians Demand Death Penalty for Grave Robber
TUBA CITY, Ariz., Feb. 13.— (LE)—Inflamed by age-old belief in the weird superstitions of their race3—yet calmed by long association with civilization—tribesmen of the western Navajo reservation today turned their backs upon the traditional mandate of death and appealed to the white man for punishment of a young brave, guilty, to them, of the most heinous crime->—grave robbery.
While old and wrinkled braves sat about eerily blazing council fires and talked of death for tne offender, younger Indians sought out federal officials and delivered to them the accused indian.
The spirit of “Smiling W’dmaD” cries for vengeance, the Navajoes declared. The grave of the young squaw, looted of a blanket and silver rings two weeks after her death, has cast upon the northern tribesmen a host of evil spirits, the old men of the tribe aver.
To expiate the deed, mutter the aged Indians, the young offender
must die, according to the old law of the redmen.
Councils were called throughout the bleak and snow-swept reservation. As the Indians harangued the redman’s law vied against that of the whites.
J. S. Wheeler, assistant United States attorney, answered the plea of the younger Indians, took from the Navajoes the accused brave and placed him in the Holbrook, Ariz., jail.
The Indian, according to Wheeler, had confessed to the deed, and readily admitted he took "Smiling Woman's” blanket and some silver coins from her dress.
Questioned by authorities, he replied he thought the blanket would keep him from freezing and that it would not do the dead woman any good. A larceny charge has been filed against him.
Had not federal authorities acted, said Wheeler, the vengeance of the tribesmen would have brought death to the youthful Indian.
Manuscripts Due For Apolliad Trials
Manuscripts for the Apolliad. tryouts for this semester are due! tomorrow at the School of Speech5 office, 354 O.C.
Each manuscript must be written with a nom-de-plume, or pen name, accompanied by a sealed envelope in which is enclosed the writer’s true name, address, his fictitious name, and the title of the manuscript.
Students are to remember that this is merely a tryout. Added information and details may bo obtained from the Speech office.
Classical Club Will Install New Heads
Officers for the spring semester! wrill be installed at a luncheon meeting of Sodalitas Classical campus classical club, to be heldi at 12:15 p.m. in the Women's! Residence hall tomorrow.
Albert Travis will continue as president of the group. Otherj officers will be: Sophie Wollis, vice-president; Pansy Haigazian.i secretary*; Hazel Eberhart, treasurer; and Borgney iliren, »o-cial chairman.

Editor, Manager
Phone RI 4111
Station 221
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJATs
United Press World Wide News Service
Vol. XXIV
Los Angeles, California, Tuesday, February 14, 1933
No. 85
ail Karris Is Scheduled for Football Dance
[Ambassador Orchestra To Play Group of Tunes On Friday Night
Entertainers Will Add to Program for Annual Benefit Event
Phil Harris and his nationally Iknown Cocoanut Grove orchestra, L^ah Ray, Lee Norton, and the rhree Ambassadors will help entertain for the annual football (dance which will be held Friday liprhT in the Fiesta room of the (Ambassador hotel. Her Johnson, [barman of the orchestra and en-f“r: muent committee, said last light.
Harris and his orchestra will >lay one entire dance group, ac->rdiag to present plans. The Jther entertainers will be featured | g intermissions. Hal Wayne tnd his orchestra, which has just jome to the Pacific Coast from Jew York City will play for the |rrid affair.
interfraternity Sponsors Sponsored by the lnterfraterni-councii, the scholarship com-littee ol the Faculty club, and Ihe Associated Fraternity Mothers’ clubs, proceeds of the hop fill go to a general Btudent loan | und, not restricted to fraternity len or sorority women.
Members of the 1932 squad, the ireeu Bay Packers, and captains id raptains-olect of southern California college teams will be lests of honor at the affair. Sev-|ral motion picture actors have )!lso l>e* a invited to attend.
Jackie Cooper To Attend Jackie Cooper, child film star, rill award the attractive door prizes to those attending the lance. These eight prizes will be fiver to the holders of winning numbers on the ticket stubs. The younj actor will officiate at the drawing.
John Miljan, featured Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer player will act as master of ceremonies for the evening. Other celebrities are expected to attend, according to Page Parker, general chairman.
Tickets are now' on sale at the cashier's window of the University bookstore and by members of the ticket committee of which Jack Rose is chairman. There is a representative of the committee I in each fraternity. The bids, which are in the form of a football licket, are SI.50.
Hoover Reaffirms G.O.P. Pledge To Back Incoming Roosevelt Administration
NEW YORK. Feb. 13—(UP)—President Hoover, in his farewell address to the American people, tonight pledged the support of the Republican party to the new Democratic administration in even- measure promoting the nation’s welfare. He spoke at a Lincoln day gathering of Republicans here.
---* Republicans will, he added, vigilantly oppose all harmful measures.
Declaring he had no complaint at the outcome of the last elec-■ tion, Mr. Hoover predicted the Republican party will be recalled
Eligible Women Will Be Listed
Pan-hel Rush Rules Must Be Observed by All University Girls
Names of girls eligible for pledging will be posted on the bulletin board of the registrar’s office tomorrow, according to the Panhellenic council. Sororities are reminded that only girls appearing on the list may be offered bids.
Rushing rules must be strictly observed by both rushees and sorority girls. A 10-minute time limit for conversation on campus extends until truce begins tomorrow at 9 p.m. Preference, which will be at the sorority houses Thursday evening, is not binding as it has been heretofore.
Dunng truce, which extends from tomorrow night until Monday at 5 p.m. when pledging takes place, there must be no communication with the exception of tomorrow evening when the rushees are called over the phone and invited to preference, and Thursday morning between 7 and 10 when rushees may phone accep-tions to preference.
Sororities must have their bids in Dean Mary Sinclair Crawford's office by 8 Friday morning, and rushees will sign their preferences before 4 Friday afternoon; after atructioniT this time sororities may call for ' Alternatives Named
to power by the American people.
G.O.P. Strength Told
“An organization that can show more than 15,000.000 adherents after 70 years—an irreducible minimum in the reaction from the worst depression the world has ever seen—is indeed testimony to the virility of the principles which Lincoln enunciated,” Mr. Hoover said. ‘ ‘Those principles, the fiber and determination of the party assure that it will be recalled to power .by the American people.” Mr. Hoover renewed his plea for retention of the gold standard as the only path of safety for the nation. He added however, that the world should endeavor to find a place for silver, at least in enlarged subsidiary coinage.
Opposes Cancellation Cancellation of war debts would not give relief and the importance of these debts in world trade is exaggerated, Mr. Hoover continued. He suggested that if central banks should cooperate to stabilize world currencies, some part of the debt payments might be set aside for temporary use in this way.
Mr. Hoover asked for national solidarity in dealing with international questions. He said the best path to recovery lay in cooperating with the world in reviving consumption and stabilized currencies and reducing trade ob-
Deadline Set Today for Annual Photos
Announcing that today would be the last day to make appointments for having El Rodeo pictures taken, Walt Roberts, editor of the 1933 annual, last night issued an ultimatum to fraternities declaring emphatically that Wednesday w'ould be the last day that anyone would be photographed.
Panels of each house have to be arranged and the pictures have to go to the engraver soon.
their un-accepted bids.
New Law School Directory Prints Student Roster
The Law school directory, of value to new pre-legal students as a handbook, was distributed today. Additional copies will be given out today.
He warned that if this way out it closed, America may have to j take the less desirable alternative of withdrawing into its democratic ! shell, boosting tariffs, quotas, and discriminations and artifiicially I curtailing farm and other produc-I tions.
National party leaders were on i hand in large numbers. As this was the last major address of i Mr. Hoover before he leaves of-j flee, it was awaited with intense I expectation as an index of the j course he believes the party should follow^ in recovering from ! the blow of last November.
Commerce Expert To Talk Tomorrow
With Dean J. Hugh Jackson of I the Stanford Graduate School of Business as guest speaker, the S. C. College of Commerce will present ts first assembly of the semester tomorrow morning at 9:55 I in Bovard auditorium.
Known throughout the Uniied I States as the author of several text-b-x>ks and as a contributor [ to national magazines. Dean Jackson if* one of the nation’s leading I educa ors in the field oi business | administration. Receiving his degree of A.B. from Simpson col-f'ege n 1912, and the degree of M.B.A. at Harvard in 1920. Professor Jackson began his educational career as a high school commerce instructor.
He received his first college appointment as assistant professor of commerce at the University of Oregon. Later he became professor of accounting at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Admit istration, where he remain-[ ed from 1923 to 1927.
Dean Jackson came to 8canford ' in 1927 as professor of accounting ln the Graduate School of Busi-I ness, and wag awarded the position of dean in 1931.
The 36-page booklet, with a dark blue cover, contains information concerning the governmental. scholastic, and professional ac- rnntAcf Tn tivities of the School of Law, be- | E-*say ^Onie« 1 O DC
sides a roster of the current law Sponsored Dy CirOUp students. -
It is issued free through the ! For thc Puri>ose of “tiiuulating courtesy of ‘Charles R. Baird of ! interest in management problems, Parker, Stone, and Baird, printers j an essa-v contest, sponsored by and publishers. The books may > *^e C. American Management be obtained in the Law building, association, is being held for all John W. Houser was editor of ! lower division men students. The the 1933 edition of the directory, essays, not to exceed 1000 wrords, --— are to be turned in to the secretary in room 110, Old College, not
Wandervogel Group later than March 1.
New Japanese Advance Ready
China Fully Prepared To Meet Invaders With Strong Opposition
(Copyright 1933 by United Press)
TOKIO, Tuesday, Feb. 14.—(LE) —Japan's military forces will shortly occupy disputed Jehol province despite world opinion, it appeared absolutely certain today.
Possibility that the grim, green-clad infantrymen of the Japanese imperial army will push on past the great Chinese wall to occupy Tientsin and Peiping cannot be ignored. Developments at Peiping and Nanking, headquarters of the Chinese nationalist government, indicate China is prepared to resist the Japanese in Jehol on a scale even more extensive than was the defense of Shanghai.
Press and public here are most concerned over developments at Geneva. Japan is sincerely anxious for league of nations approval of its activities.
Japanese diplomatic leaders, however, bluntly declare the league and the United States government a?« mistaken, il they believe there will be any deviation from Japan’s fixed policy of continuing dejure recognition of Manchoukuo.
Veteran observers have never seen Japan more united.
Informed sources declare the league and the United States must be prepared to use extensive military force if they hope to carry out any subsequent efforts to enforce their view points in the Far East after the league of nations assembly adopts pending recommendations criticizing Japanese activity in Manchuria.
Japan will unquestionably reject the league’s Manchuria recommendations, although an attempt may be made to delay proceedings by suggesting revisions, «uuendments and reservations.
All-Campus Man T o Be Revealed In Wampus Poll
February Issue of Humor Magazine To Emerge Friday, Feb. 17
Prologue to Big Mystery To Be Published as First of Serial
The ‘‘All-Campus Man,” chosen by a poll of prominent women of the campus, will be a feature of the February issue of tho Wampus which will make its first appearance of the semester, Friday, the 17 th.
The Wampus, this month, offers the prologue to a great campus mystery, “Death to 6,000,” by the Pre-Rf.phaelite brotherhood. This prologue, as it will give a clue to the outcome of the serial, of which the first installment will appear in the March issue.
Eddy Writes on Hockey Arnol Eddy, patron saint of ice hockey at S.C., has written an article on the Trojan ice hockey team for fans of the sport,
Gooney Island, \N'ampus colony at the North Pole, claims four more victims this month, and their names will ba revealed on Friday. Last month, Ted Magee, Mary Ann Cotton, Erma Eldridge, and Mac Morganthau were “Goo ney-ed.”
Super-Snooping Staff An entire new staff of supersnoopers has been added to what was already a complete and sen sational staff of gossip-gleaners. These newr members of the staff are second cousins to the Belch boys, Satchel and Rainwater, and will scandalize the campus with their choice bits of "dirt.”
“The All-Campus Male” is a poll conducted among campus women to determine their requisites for the ideal man; while the ideal campus is visualized by Polly White and Juanita MacIntyre in “Co-ed Paradise.”
A special story about the Trojan Knights has been written by Bob Boyle, Trojan Knight. Bob Russell presents the Second appearance of “Bitter Annie,” and Douglas Hale again offers his "Spartan Page.”
Photographic Cover In a more serious vein are “The Bookworm Turns,” by Les Koritz and style columns for both men and women. Kappa Alpha Theta and Sigma Phi Epsilon are the featured sorority and fraternity in this issue.
The cover of the magazine is a photographic study by Max Plake, and is different from those previously used.
A number of jokes and cartoons are used to complete the issue.
Fatty Arbuckle Says Laughs Harder To Get
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 13. —(ILE)—Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle, once the leading comedian of the screen, today reported it’s harder now to make people laugh than in the era of custard pies.
“I’m just a vaudeville performer now,” said Arbuckle as he stopped here with Mrs. Arbuckle on their way to Hollywood.
One of his pictures is to be released shortly and he will make another at the end of his vaudeville contract in April.
Ball and Chain Plans To Initiate Pledges
Ball and Chain will hold an [initiat-on banquet tomorrow eve-I amg at the College Inn for its I pledges. The dinner will start at 16 o’clock, and only those pledges [that tave paid their fees will receive the ritual.
I Election of new officers for this [semester also will take place.
Crisis in Holland THE HAGUE, Holland, Feb. 13. i—(LE)—Queen Wilhelmina hurried [back from a holiday in Switrer-jland today to face a critical gov-iamnit-: t situation.
Will Entertain Today
The German club will meet today at 12:15 p.m. in the religious center. The Wandervogel group, which has appeared on campus before, will sing at thi6 meeting. All students interested in German are invited to attend. Box lunches and chocolate will cost 25 cents.
Suggested subjects for the contest include: Five-Hour Day, Its Possibilities in American Industry; Shorter Working Week in American Industry; Influence of Mechanization on Purchasing Power; Effect of Standardization and Specialization on the Standard of Living of Workers; Re-use as It Affects Conservation.
184 Men and 301 Women Enroll in Botany Classes
A woman dressed in mannish attire, striding over hill and dale, plucking blossoms as she goes, and after picking the buds, pressing the flowers in a book and then forgetting them—this is the concept of a botanist by tbe man in the street.
The average S.C. student seems to side with him with the addition of a fresh angle—namely that a botany course is one wherein young women enroll, learn long j Latin names for flow ers, and i promptly forget them. But as far as botany having a practical application to everyday life and being a science in which men participate—that idea seems a little impossible of assimilation by the ordinary person. Figures and facts collected by the botany depart ment, however, seem to prove that brawny men as well as fair women select botany courses and also that botany has a real economic value.
During th® year 1931-32 there were 184 men enrolled in botany
classes and 301 women, which seems to indicate that the study of plant life is of interest to S.C. men. During the same year the number of men who were awarded their master’s degrees in botany practically equalled that of the women.
“While botany as a profession is overcrowded, as are many other fields, it still offers an opportunity to people who wish to do creative work,” according to Mrs. Tema Clare, professor of botany. “Positions in citrus experiment stations, forestry, nurseries, agriculture, and government work are frequently open to botany graduates.”
The S.C. department of botany offers courses in plantecology, in which plant habitat is studied; the study of fungi diseases and parasites; marine plant biology, in which the various seaweeds are studied; and plant physiology, a course for the study of plant reactions and structures
Botanists Plan Field Excursion
Beginning a series of four field trips, general botany classes will make an excursion to Whites’ point, Saturday, for the purpose of studying marine vegetation. George R. Johnstone, professor of botany, will accompany students.
Transportation by means of private cars will be carried on, as in the past. Students wrill meet in the Herbarium, 269 Science, at 9 a.m. Saturday, and will return there by 1 p.m.
Whites’ point is approximately one mile west of Point Firmin, San Pedro, Students should carry a notebook and laboratory paper to use in collection of specimens. The trip is optional for introductory botany classes. Professor Johnstone announced that it would be advisable, but not necessary, to carry lunches.
Hitler Completes Move
BERLIN, Fob. 13.—(LE)—Chancellor Adolf Hitler's “house-cleaning” of Prussia’s administration continued today with an order which eliminated the last remaining Socialist governors and police chiefs in that state.
Assembly
A modern interpretation of St. \ alentine’s day will be the subject of Dr. Bruce Baxter’s talk at 9:55 this morning. Particular reference to the sanctity of the home will be made.
An organ program by Willard Smith will include “Preludio and Siciliano” by Masagni, and "Sortie” by Dubois.
Newman Club Will Hold Dance, Party
Climaxing its pre-lenten social activities, S. C. Newman club will hold a combination card party and dance, Feb. 21, at Newman hall, 4665 Willowbrook avenue, adjacent to Los Angeles junior college campus.
Committee members as announced by John Raymond, president, are: Helen Townsend, Don Sullivan, co-chairmen; Fred Robinson, Mary Ingebrand, Thomas Haley, Loran Ryan, reception; Jean Mustard, Grace Kelly, refreshment; Lucille Moore, cards; Lud Lynch, tickets; Jean McCarter, publicity.
Several prominent orchestras are being considered dfor the dance, which will begin at 9 p.m. and continue until 12, according to Mr. Raymond. Cards will open the evening’s entertainment at 7:30. Closing the games at 9, various attractive prizes will be awarded winners.
Attendance at the affair will be open to all Catholic students and their friends. Individual tickets, at 50 cents, may be obtained from the cashier’s desk in the bookstore or from members of the club/
N.C.P. To Cast Extras Today
Minor Characters Needed For Production of “He Who Gets Slapped”
With the casting today of minor and atmosphere players for the annual N.C.P. production “He Who Gets Slapped,” work on the play will proceed with the cast
complete.
That these minor characters are very essential to the mood and general atmosphere of the play was emphasized by W. Ray MacDonald, who is directing the cast. Tryouts will be held in Bovard at 3:15 and he has invited anyone interested in acting to appear as he will need about 15 characters to complete the cast.
Circus and character stage types will comprise the “atmosphere” personnel. A few' of the parts will be speaking parts, wrhile the other will be more of the crowd scene description. Acrobats, strong men, bareback riders, actresses, and clowns will make up this group and provide the circus background.
The play, a three-act drama by Leonid Andreyev, is a translation from the Russian and portrays the spirit of unrest that prevailed during her frequent revolutions. MacDonald states that it is a symbolic type of play and is one of the heaviest drama plays that a campus cast has ever attempted here.
With the cast of experienced players that have been chosen for the play, he feels confident that an authentic reproduction will be given. The cast of major players includes such well-known campus names as George Ordansky, Norman Wright, Jack Swarthout, Bill Hoppe, Dorothea Bell, Jean Sellers, Bob Boyle, Myra Jane McClung, Margaret Dudley, and Wallace Fraser.
The group has been rehearsing for the past twro weeks.
Fraternities Climax Rushing Activities With Announcement Of New Pledges, Totaling 57
Theater, Mountain Parties, Dances, Stag Affairs, Included in Programs of Season; 13 Men Listed by Phi Kappa Tau
Climaxing a series of entertainments which included theater and mountain parties, dances and stag affairs, fraternities on the campus last night announced the list of their new pledges.
Phi Kappa Tau with 13 prospective members, Sigma Chi with 8 pledges, and Kappa Sigma with 6 neophytes, lead the list of numbers. *
Pledges of Phi Kappa Tau are Nils Altheln, Carlton Ball, Frank Bird, Carl Bland. Wyllis Clark, Frank Doig, Frank Ghiglia. Pink Jones, Martin Kordlck, Walter Harbert, Hamilton Pearce, Johnny Stinson, and Clark Talbot.
Eight for Sigma Chi Sigma Chi’s eight neophytes are Kenny Carpenter, Harry Renick, Dick Applegate, Inky Wotkyns, Gene Fletcher, George McNeish, Bud Rublee, and Howard Smith.
New pledges of Kappa Sigma are Don Hendricks, Phil Searles, Sheldon Loughborough. Bob Hien-zes, Tom Young, and Ted Dirks.
Kappa Alpha pledged Wendell Sether, Al Fitch, Bud Campbell, Pat Henney, and Dick Cummings.
Other Fraternities Pledges of other fraternities follow': Delta Chi, James Appleby, Denny Gless, John Carrington, Earl Ahrens, Jack Witworth, and Andy Sparh; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Charles Archibald, Thomas Rockwell, Roland Smith, Gene Hanson, and Harold Heigold; and Sigma Phi Epsilon, William Tomin, Homer McDowell, Maurice Bonissol, Vic Ried, and Dick Ulrey.
Phi Kappa P3i announces as its pledges Bob Fahy, Bud Fobes, John Raunceville, and Les Guthrie. Sigma Tau pledged Pat Mc-
Activity Points Will
Six New Cardinals Due
VATICAN CITY, Feb. 13.—(IT.E) —Six new cardinals, one from North America, will be created by Pope Pius XI at a secret consistory to be held one month from today.
Roosevelt To Return
MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 13. — (LE) — President-elect Roosevelt will start north late Wednesday night, arriving in New York Friday morning.
All girls wishing to work in the student body offices for activity points are requested to meet Phyllis Doran, secretary to Orv Mohler, president of the A.S. U.S.C., at 12:15 today in S.U. 235 for an interview.
The work will be of regular office routine consisting of typing, filing, and answering the telephone.
Troy To Meet Weber and Oxy
Cancellation of Debts Question of Debate This Afternoon
Continuing preparation on the war debts question after meeting Stanford last Thursday and Friday, the varsity debate squad de* bated Northwest Nazar ene col* lege Friday noon, and will meet a team from W'ebster college tc^ day and two teams from Occidental college later this week.
This afternoon at 3 p.m. ia Hoose 206, Russell Nixon and Lawrence Pritchard will represent Troy in a debate against Web*T college, Ogden. Utah, on the cancellation of war debts. Nixon and Pritchard will advocate their cancellation and the Weber college speake-s will speak against the cancellation in the non-decisioa encounter.
Radio Tilt Decision This is the second debate on thid question to be staged for a Troy audience. Early in January a Trojan team spoke on the nega-Alonan and Walter Stevens. Sigma ! tive of the war debts question Nu pledges are William Sandine, against a team from the Lni'er-Arthur Cook, and Marvin Busby. sit-y of Utah.
The radio debate with Stanford on Communism in Russia is still being decided by the, audience which heard the contest over the air. The debate manager will announce at an early date the winner.
Ames Crawford and Robert North won the audience decision in the debate in Bovard auditorium last Thursday and are waiting for the audience decision from the KFI listeners.
Intra-Squad Contests Clinton Jones and Trevor Hawkins represented S.C. in a nondecision debate on war debts with Northwest Nazarene college before the Unity Republican club Friday noon at Leighton’s cafeteria.
Sunday nfght eight men of the varsity debate squad took part in two intra-squad debates before off campus audiences. At the West Adams Baptist church James Jacobs and Samuel Colton upheld the cancellation of war debts a-gainst Roy Johnston and Jack Layng.
Later in the evening Lawrence Pritchard and Russell Nixon spoke in the affirmative of cancellation of the debts against Martyn Agens and Trevor Hawkins at the Los Angeles open forum, where aa audience decision gave to Ntxon and Pritchard.
'Hs \i\
Tomorrow Last Time To Submit For Quill Club
With the concluding of the semi-annual Quill club contest, the manuscripts will be distributed to the committee of judges at the regular meeting of the club tomorrow night DeWitt Miller, president, reports that a large number of contestants have shown an interest in the contest of creative literary work. The deadline for all material will be tomorrow noon, at ' which time all manuscripts should be in the office of the English department on the third floor of Bridge hall.
All types of literary work are acceptable in this contest, including poetry, plays, fiction, and essays. All students except enter-
Be Awarded Coeds ing freshmen are eligible to submit original material.
Results of the judges’ decisions wrill be announced in about a week. No material except winning manuscripts will be returned, because of the volume which has been received.
A pen name must appear on the right hand corner of each paper with the real name and address enclosed in an attached envelope.
Old Indians Demand Death Penalty for Grave Robber
TUBA CITY, Ariz., Feb. 13.— (LE)—Inflamed by age-old belief in the weird superstitions of their race3—yet calmed by long association with civilization—tribesmen of the western Navajo reservation today turned their backs upon the traditional mandate of death and appealed to the white man for punishment of a young brave, guilty, to them, of the most heinous crime->—grave robbery.
While old and wrinkled braves sat about eerily blazing council fires and talked of death for tne offender, younger Indians sought out federal officials and delivered to them the accused indian.
The spirit of “Smiling W’dmaD” cries for vengeance, the Navajoes declared. The grave of the young squaw, looted of a blanket and silver rings two weeks after her death, has cast upon the northern tribesmen a host of evil spirits, the old men of the tribe aver.
To expiate the deed, mutter the aged Indians, the young offender
must die, according to the old law of the redmen.
Councils were called throughout the bleak and snow-swept reservation. As the Indians harangued the redman’s law vied against that of the whites.
J. S. Wheeler, assistant United States attorney, answered the plea of the younger Indians, took from the Navajoes the accused brave and placed him in the Holbrook, Ariz., jail.
The Indian, according to Wheeler, had confessed to the deed, and readily admitted he took "Smiling Woman's” blanket and some silver coins from her dress.
Questioned by authorities, he replied he thought the blanket would keep him from freezing and that it would not do the dead woman any good. A larceny charge has been filed against him.
Had not federal authorities acted, said Wheeler, the vengeance of the tribesmen would have brought death to the youthful Indian.
Manuscripts Due For Apolliad Trials
Manuscripts for the Apolliad. tryouts for this semester are due! tomorrow at the School of Speech5 office, 354 O.C.
Each manuscript must be written with a nom-de-plume, or pen name, accompanied by a sealed envelope in which is enclosed the writer’s true name, address, his fictitious name, and the title of the manuscript.
Students are to remember that this is merely a tryout. Added information and details may bo obtained from the Speech office.
Classical Club Will Install New Heads
Officers for the spring semester! wrill be installed at a luncheon meeting of Sodalitas Classical campus classical club, to be heldi at 12:15 p.m. in the Women's! Residence hall tomorrow.
Albert Travis will continue as president of the group. Otherj officers will be: Sophie Wollis, vice-president; Pansy Haigazian.i secretary*; Hazel Eberhart, treasurer; and Borgney iliren, »o-cial chairman.